Page:The religion of Plutarch, a pagan creed of apostolic times; an essay (IA religionofplutar00oakeiala).pdf/247

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in that body of Hellenic wisdom which had been the material of Plutarch's work were most conspicuous in the Theology and Dæmonology of the Neo-Platonists. Plutarch had been content to state the Unity, Eternity, Absoluteness of God. He needed such a conception to make the world intelligible; but he defined his conception with a rare simplicity which satisfies the practical mind as well as meets the essential requirements of Philosophy. But the Neo-Platonist theology refines and subdivides and abstracts to an extent which puzzles and bewilders its most earnest students, and removes God infinitely further from mankind than even the Ideas of Plato are removed. "According to Plotinus, God is Goodness without Love. Man may love God, but God cannot love man." Even the "Divine Soul," the third Hypostasis of the Neo-Platonist Trinity, that which lies nearest the comprehension of the common intellect, "is of little intellectual or religious significance in the mind of Plotinus." Dogmatism would be unbecoming on a subject where Kirchner and Zeller are at variance, and where the French lucidity of Vacherot and Saisset casts little more light than the close and careful analysis of Dr. Bigg.[1] But it is necessary to a full

  1. Though having also carefully studied both Zeller and Vacherot (Zeller: Die Philosophie der Griechen, vol. iii.; Vacherot: Histoire critique de l'Ecole d'Alexandrie), we have specially used for the purposes of the text the close analysis of the various aspects of Neo-Platonism presented by Dr. Bigg in his "Neo-Platonism," and the interesting account given by M. Saisset in his article "De l'Ecole d'Alexandrie," written for the "Revue des Deux Mondes," of September, 1844, as a review of Jules Simon's work on the Alexandrian School.—For the Neo-Platonist Dæmonology we have largely consulted Wolff.